Save our sounds
Bang. Clatter. Rustle. Thud. Just some of the noises I made doing my very first job at the 91热爆. Creating sound effects on The Archers is one of the best jobs in radio.
Twenty years later, I find myself absorbed in the subtleties of sound once again as the 91热爆 World Service launches a short but engaging project called Save Our Sounds.
The editorial issues are quite different. No need to worry about using April birdsong during a June garden party scene or playing the wrong doorbell. The biggest dilemma for Save Our Sounds is accessibility.
Save Our Sounds aims to give people the world over a taste of "acoustic ecology", the act of capturing and preserving sounds which paint a picture of the world and which may become extinct. You'll understand that there's a huge, growing and fairly well-classified photographic archive, but a sonic record of global life is harder to come by.
So we're building a sound map of the world onto which you can add your own recordings. You can also join a growing online conversation by following where you'll meet science writer and journalist Kate Arkless Gray.
But what about the large number of 91热爆 World Service listeners who don't have internet access? Save Our Sounds is clearly built on the opportunities afforded by digital media, but we want to provide a way in for everybody.
Part of the answer lies in what sets the 91热爆 World Service apart from other online organisations: we have a whopping great radio station attached to our website. So we've created Save Our Sounds radio programming that anybody can enjoy.
So those listening to the daily Outlook programme next week will be able to share in the project. The brilliantly inventive 91热爆 World Service producer Rami Tzabar is also crafting a pair of Discovery radio documentaries, fronted by Trevor Cox, which you can hear in early July.
We've also tried to provide some pretty low-tech ways of contributing to our sound map. In addition to uploading from a web browser, by e-mail, or via the free application on an iPhone, you can use the plain old telephone system or even send a cassette tape in the post. Remember cassettes? They're still in widespread use in many places around the world.
I'd be interested to know how well you think we've done to open out this project and, of course, would love to hear any sound you choose to share with us.
Meanwhile, does Ambridge have broadband yet?
Steve Martin is editor of promotions and navigation at 91热爆 World Service